Voting is actually all it’s cracked up to be?

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There really isn’t a problem with Rob Ford, the problem lies with us.
Yes, us, the many. us, the precocious youth of Toronto and it’s surrounding boroughs (but really us of Toronto), and us, the apathetic empowered. With a turnout of just over 50 per cent in the last mayoral election, we have only ourselves to blame for the clusterfuck that is turning our city, and through guilt-by-association-because- people-in-china-don’t-know- what-a-Scarborough-is, the entire GTA into a global laughingstock. We chose not to vote, and now we are here.
I don’t know anyone who voted for rob Ford. Does anyone know anyone who voted for Rob Ford? But he is our mayor. Our vaguely  homophobic, racist, and now confessed crack-smoking mayor. I think this stems from this fact: I don’t know anyone who voted for Rob Ford, yes, but i don’t know many people who voted, period.

A quick rundown of my Facebook presents a myriad of responses to Rob Ford, ranging from the hypocritically outraged (“I can’t believe this tool is running our town”) to the insipidly ironic (“Rob Ford’s a goddamn hero who took the valuable lessons taught in Scarface to heart and should be an inspiration to us all”).

It’s easy to get caught up in the idea of stagnancy, the concept that no matter who we vote for, things will stay the same, so why vote at all?
But change starts at a grassroots level, and it’s hard to get more grassroots than municipal politics,  except in Mississauga, but Empress Mccallion is the exception to the rule.

A city like Toronto is too diverse, too susceptible to the ever-changing needs of a growing and diverse group of people to ever have an entrenched ruling power. But this system of voting for the guy who will do you right is predicated on, you know, actually fucking voting.

If you didn’t vote, it’s easy to bitch and moan after the fact.

It’s easy to blame all the frumpy tight-holes in the outlying (read: conservative blue) parts of Toronto that voted in Rob Ford, but that doesn’t change the fact that you are the most essential part of the problem. Because you didn’t vote.
And after the fact, you didn’t protest. You didn’t make it known to your councillor or to the people  who can enact change to make life better for you that you don’t want Rob Ford in your life (armchair activists take note: retweeting “#robFord #Sucks” is ineffective). You didn’t take to the streets and make it known that this is NOT the guy you want running your city.

And if you’re not from this city, you’re tethered to it, simply by virtue of the fact you’re going to York, which is just inside the city boundaries.
So let’s not shit where we eat, and do something as simple as voting him out if and when the time comes, because no one’s so goddamn postmodern they can’t tick a ballot box to make their lives and the lives of everyone around them that much better.
If you’re one of the alarming few who did vote, I’m sorry. You’re  cool. You totally earned your ironic comments and not-so-disingenuous outrage. The truth is, all of us are affected by this,  and this is our issue. We’re the ones who determine if Rob Ford gets to keep his job or not. I always thought Rob Ford had the stature of a good department store Santa.

How about, come next election, we make sure the crack pipes go in the stockings and not city hall?
Abdul Malik
Arts Editor

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